Before the 1990s, you would be hard pressed to find any mention of Wiracocha, or any of the alternative names and spellings for the creator deity looming from the mountainside over this historic Inca settlement and ceremonial site. Not Tunupa, no Viracocha, nor Apu Qun Tiqsi Wiraqutra. Not a single Kon-Tiki.

The face of Wiracocha was pointed out to me by a guide the first time I visited Ollantaytambo in 1997. She held in her hands a recently-published book, The Sacred Valley of the Incas: Myths and Symbols by brothers Fernando and Edgar Elorrieta (1995).

This is a book you’ll see so many guides using today as a reference as they take visitors through the Sacred Valley.

I remember I bought a copy in 1997, and found it a hugely entertaining read. It ties together Andean mythology, solar alignments and is chock full of illustrations to make a case for mystic images and hidden iconography contained in the megalithic architecture and surrounding landscapes of Inca and pre-Inca sites.

The Elorrieta brothers identify, among other things, a lizard, two pumas (one upright, one crouching), and a cosmic bird at Machu Picchu; a flying condor at Pisaq; a guanaco at Tiwanaku; and at Ollantaytambo, a condor, a sacred tree, two llamas, a corn cob and, most impressively, Wiracocha.

I never thought to scrutinize too closely their interpretation.

There is another book, which I cannot recommend highly enough, Exploring Cusco by Peter Frost. It has just been released in a 6th revised edition. Frost, in the politest, low-key manner, notes that it has “become fashionable, almost dominant” to interpret that craggy rock formation at Ollantaytambo as representative of Wiracocha.

As is often the case when I read Peter Frost’s writing, my interest was piqued. So I went searching for any scholarly reference I could find to Wiracocha and the mountainside of Pinculluna.

And I found one!

In a paper by Hernàn Amat Olazàbal published in 1994, Arqueologia y Etnohistoria de Ollantaytambo, there is a citation of a “little-known passage” in the chronicles of the Augustinian friar Antonio de la Calancha (1584–1684).

“He says that the first survivor of the deluge was Wiracocha or the Tunupa of the Titicaca highlands, ‘that those of the provinces of Cuzco recognized him as his Father, his father and his God, and that he appeared in Tambo, a town next to Cuzco, and that he went out through a window, and became a stone to which they made great veneration‘ (Calancha, 1974: I, 210).”

“Later on, Calancha says that the tradition of those of Cuzco and Tambo reported that Manco Cápac had founded the first town in Tambo,” Olazàbal continues.

And then Olazàbal poses the question, “The image of a long-lived human head that stands on the slope of Pinculluna, would it not be the perpetuation of that primal personage who ‘had divided the world into four parts’?”

That’s the one reference I found.

Some background: Manco Cápac, the mythical son of the sun god Inti and the progenitor of the Inca dynasty, came nine generations before Inca Pachacutec, the historical ruler whose royal estates included Ollantaytambo. He died around 1471.

Four generations after him came Manco Inca Yupanqui, who was installed by the Conquistador Francisco Pizarro, but then revolted against the Spaniards in 1536.

The Inca’s only outright victory over the Conquistadores occurred during that prolonged rebellion in 1537 at, or very near, Ollantaytambo. (If you want to read about it, again, I can’t recommend Exploring Cusco highly enough.) Soon thereafter, Manco established the Neo-Inca State in a jungle refuge, Vilcabamba, beyond the immediate reach of the Spaniards.

In 1539, Pizarro sent forces into Vilcabamba to try to capture him. That primary mission didn’t work, but the endeavor was far from a failure.

To quote Exploring Cusco:

“The campaign had been a qualified success; the Spaniards had not succeeded in capturing Manco Inca, but they had loot, and they had with them the captive Coya, Cura Ocllo, wife and sister of Manco Inca. Francisco Pizarro himself arrived on the scene, hoping to negotiate Manco’s surrender. When Manco refused to negotiate Pizarro vented his anger on Cura Ocllo. She was stripped naked, flogged and then killed with arrows. So that Manco should understand fully what had happened, Pizarro had her body tied to a raft and floated down the Urubamba to be discovered by the Inca’s men downstream.”

Now, we can’t know for sure whether those Inca troops venerated the mountain image of Wiracocha before they went into battle in 1537. Nor could anyone say whether Cura Ocllo peered up to the deity two years later as the Spanish archers took aim.

But we can say with certainty that thousands of tourists do so now.

There is no argument, it is an iconic view and makes for a spectacular photo.

Are you interested in a private tour of the Sacred Valley and Ollantaytambo?

Rick Vecchio, Fertur’s director of development and marketing, was educated at the New School for Social Research and Columbia Graduate School of Journalism. He worked for Pacifica Radio WBAI and as a daily reporter for newspapers in New Jersey, New York and Massachusetts. Then in 1996, he decided it was time to realize a life-long dream of traveling to Peru. He never went back. While serving as Peru country manager for the South American Explorers from 1997-1999, he fell in love with Fertur's founder, Siduith Ferrer, and they married. Over the next six years, he worked as a correspondent for The Associated Press. Meanwhile, Siduith built the business, which he joined in January 2007. Now he designs custom educational and adventure tour packages for corporate and institutional clients, oversees Fertur’s Internet platform and occasionally leads special trips, always with an eye open for a good story to write about.